Thomas W Leiperwrote: "You could put a cheap linear filament bulb (like fish tank bulbs) inside a rotating can with a vertical slit (aligned with the bulb filament). Put one photocell close to the can for a reference signal. As the can rotates you get a timing pulse." My thoughts: On the surplus market, in the motors section of the various catalogs there are often motors with the multi-faceted mirror attached. These units have come out of laser scanner units. If you wanted to try Tom's method, I think it would be much simpler to start with one of these as they're balanced, and have good optical first surface mirrors. Personally I think it would be a difficult challenge to obtain satisfactory results for the following reason. Start with a reasonable rotation rate of 3600 rpm on the scanner motor. Assume that your optical path length is 10 ft long and that your detectors are 0.1 inch in dia. Your first number is the pulse width on the detector. 0.1 in / {10 ft * 12 in/ft * 2 * pi * (3600rpm/60 sec/min)} = pulse width in seconds = 2.210485320721E-6 Or about 2 us. You now need to resolve this to parts in 2^16. It's not going to happen. The fastest optical diodes available today are in the 10 GHz range which would only get you to 2^7 and those diodes and circuitry are not cheap -- they are state of the art. In fact, it would take a bit of doing to even see, much less decimate, the 2 us pulse with standard silicon solar cells. Some photo-diodes have responses beyond this region but you have left the easy designs and are starting to step into interesting territory. Regards, Charles R. Patton __________________________________________________________ Public Seismic Network Mailing List (PSN-L)
Larry Cochrane <cochrane@..............>